Oct. 16th, 2021

purplecat: The Ninth Doctor with decorative effect with the number 9 (Who:Nine)

The cover to Damaged Goods by Russell T. Davies.  Tentacles erupting from a corpse rising from the ground.

I have not commented on the news that RTD is to return to Doctor Who. Mostly because I'm still all a bit turned around and, if not lacking in time exactly, somewhat lacking in motivation and energy. Still I do have an opinion, which is mild trepidation. I wasn't grabbed by his vision for the show back in 2005 and definitely preferred Moffat's run as show runner (which isn't to ignore how wildly popular his version of the show was, and how much it did to shape and secure the show's future). Obviously RTD has done exciting things since, but I have a vague sense that comebacks are tricky things and often of dubious success. On the other hand, he does know how to adapt to time and circumstance. His one foray into the novels during the wilderness years (cover above) was very much of their time and style and, while one can draw links between it and 2005 Doctor Who (mostly that it's set on a council estate) he created something very different for the family audience. Perhaps he will do something exciting and different again for the modern TV landscape.
purplecat: The Millennium Falcon from Star Wars (Star Wars)
Q17: What is your favourite source text for fandom stuff (e.g., TV shows, movies, books, anime, Western animation, etc.)?

Probably TV shows. There's something about the weekly serialised format - which is the form of most of my fandoms - that provides a shape for things to go in the gaps, either full blown case/mission/whatever stories or character pieces. The times I've written fanfic for standalone movies or books, it's often felt like I'm artificially trying to squeeze things into gaps that don't exist, or extend a story beyond it's natural end. Not all books and movies, of course. Things like the MCU and Star Wars movies function much like super-expensive TV shows that take longer to come out (though even with Star Wars, I find it tricky to fit things around the trilogies that feel somewhat self-contained), and there are plenty of book series that work in much the same way. Still, I find it easiest to work with source texts that are shaped as a series of adventures and that form is more dominant in TV than other media.

Questions Under the Cut )

Profile

purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Default)
purplecat

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    1 2 3
4 56789 10
111213 141516 17
18192021222324
25 262728293031

Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags